Jolly Good Show, Old Bean (Part 2)
A grim silence reigned in the cramped turbolift. The
explosion had shaken the entire ship, ripped a great hole in the
saucer section of the vessel. The contents of the deck had been
blown out into space, although thankfully the deck had been
evacuated in time. Klumf had been the last to depart, although
there had been no word from Damerell since the explosion. His
crewmates were beginning to fear the worst, and Wall was
practically inconsolable.
For the first time in his life, Hill wondered exactly how much
it was possible to fit into a turbolift. For instance, take the
current situation. Due to the number of people and amount of
equipment it was necessary to get to the centre of the damage as
quickly as possible, the turbolift had been crammed full of
everything possible. The current list was Hill,
Cholmondely-Smythe, Counsellor Hill, Barfoot, two security guards
and three engineers, all in tight fitting EVA suits, along with
four portable bulkheads to shore up the damage and seal the
section, a collection of air canisters and innumerable other
pieces of equipment. To make matters worse, the turbolifts were
damaged and could only move at a snail's pace down the shaft.
The intercom beeped.
"Commander," Cholmondely-Smythe requested from the other side
of the bulkheads, where he was pinned against the wall, "would
you be so good as to get that?"
Hill stretched out his arm and tried to reach the toggle, but
could not reach. In fact, none of the others in the lift could
reach. The intercom continued to beep.
Cholmondely-Smythe sighed and, bracing himself against the
wall of the turbolift, worked his way up onto the top of the
first portable bulkhead. He eased his way across to the other
side of the lift and, using one hand to hold himself steady,
leant down to reach the intercom. Eventually, braced upside down
against the wall and with one leg hooked around a bulkhead, he
flicked the switch.
"Cholmondely-Smythe here," he said in a remarkably normal
voice.
"We've restored partial intercom circuits to deck seven,"
Stark reported.
"Very well, put me on." There was a pause, then a click. "Mr
Damerell, if you are there, come in please," Cholmondely-Smythe
said then. "Again I say, come in Mr Damerell."
The only response was the gentle hiss and pop of metal exposed
to vacuum and absolute zero.
"No reply," Stark said, unnecessarily.
"Be so good as to keep monitoring the channels, there's a good
chap," Cholmondely-Smythe said, rather distantly. To lose an
officer so soon in his command was not going to look good.
The channel closed and Cholmondely-Smythe attempted to pull
himself back up onto the bulkheads. His grip slipped, and he
fell down the gap between the bulkhead and the doors, becoming
wedged upside down about a foot off the floor.
"Spiffing," he said sarcastically. A moment later the lift
slowed to a stop and the doors opened, spilling the captain out
into the corridor beyond. Although the artificial gravity
generators were still operational, it was obvious the entire
atmosphere had been sucked out of the deck by the oddly distorted
view.
"Very well," Cholmondely-Smythe getting to his feet and
brushing imaginary dust from his suit. "Let us proceed."
The turbolift was soon emptied and the group separated to
begin an examination of the deck, after agreeing to meet at the
source of the explosion, sector thirty-eight. After a short
time, they were once again assembled. Hill swallowed as he
looked out over the gaping hole. The corridor was thrown into
stark relief by the peculiar lighting effect produced by the hull
breach. Barfoot quickly confirmed that the emergency forcefields
in the area were offline. A brief look of consternation crossed
his face, which Cholmondely-Smythe picked up on.
"Something wrong, old chap?"
"There's no good reason for the forcefields to be down, sir,"
Barfoot reported. "There's no indication of damage from the
explosion, apart from some minor faults, but the system is
designed to withstand exactly that. If the field in one area
fails, the ones in the surrounding area should kick into high
gear to compensate. But they're all just simply inactive." The
engineer ripped a panel off a wall nearby. He straightened
abruptly.
"They've been sabotaged, captain. All of them."
Cholmondely-Smythe stared off into the distant blackness as
the engineers began to work on fixing the portable bulkheads.
"Tell me, Number One," he mused, "does this sort of thing happen
a great deal?"
"You mean in general, sir? Or on board the Psycho?"
"On board."
Hill thought about it. "We don't often get sabotage," he
admitted, "but given what else the ship has been through, I
suppose it's about time it happened."
"Ah. Jolly good." The captain sighed again. "It just seems
a little hard to believe. I mean, my first mission in command,
what is simply meant to be some posturing and bravado, and this
happens."
"I shouldn't worry sir," Hill said cheerfully. "You get used
to it." He glanced out at the stars. "If you don't mind, I
think I'll go and have a look around."
"What?" Cholmondely-Smythe's head snapped round. "Oh,
splendid idea. Take the security guards with you, will you?"
Hill wandered off down the corridor with the security guards
following, keeping in practice by muttering 'hut, hut'
under their breath and flattening themselves against the
occasional wall. Hill put up with this until one of them managed
to trip over his own feet and sprawled headlong into a storage
cabinet, knocking open the hatch and spilling its contents to the
floor.
"Okay, guys, can you please go away now?" he asked, and they
sheepishly backed away. In a few moments he was alone. He
walked over to the bulkhead and laid a hand on the wall. He was
about to move away when, faintly, he felt a small vibration in
the plating. Frowning, he leant in closer, resting his helmet
against the metal. There it was again, faint but distinct.
"Hill to bridge."
"Go ahead Commander," Stark replied.
"Can you locate the source of some strange vibrations I'm
picking up in sector... thirty four," he said after a quick
glance around.
"Hold on, I'll get Bleep on it."
A new voice came onto the channel.
"I am reading an odd disturbance in the communication panel to
your left," Bleep told him. He moved to the panel and laid a
hand on it. The vibration was slightly stronger. He looked down
the corridor, moved a few feet and laid another hand on the
wall. Again, it was stronger. He looked down and saw the
turbolift doors. Running towards them, he laid his hands on the
door. Now the vibrations were recognisable as Morse code.
"Q... X... M..." he muttered. Only one person, apart from
Wall, could possibly be that incompetent at Morse code. "It's
Damerell!" he cried, and raised a hand to bang a response. He
hesitated as the corridor was flooded with light. By the time he
realised that it was just power being restored to the section,
the turbolift behind the doors had moved away.
Damerell slumped as he felt the lift begin to move. The doors
of the lift had just begun to open as the explosion had lifted
him off his feet and propelled him into the lift. As a result
the back of his head was singed and his left shoulder hurt where
he had collided with the half-open doors. The sensors in the
lift had detected the drop in atmospheric pressure and
automatically triggered the doors to close, preventing the air in
the rest of the ship from being sucked out into space and also,
incidentally, saving his life.
Now he sat and waited to see where the lift would deposit
him. As it turned out, it was on deck five, not far from the
security office. Since it was the closest inhabited place on the
ship, he made his way there. When the door opened, he was
confronted with utter darkness.
"H... hello?" he quavered, hesitantly. "Anyone there?"
Abruptly he realised that he was standing silhouetted in the
doorway and his finely tuned self-preservation instincts kicked
in, throwing himself sideways just as a beam of light lanced out
to scorch the wall behind his head. Whimpering in panic, he
scrambled across the floor until he collided with a wall, which
happened to be the one housing the weapons locker. A weapon! he
thought. That was a good idea. He slowly raised himself,
trusting his attacker to be as blind as him in the complete
darkness. He pressed the button.
"Voice print identification required," the computer boomed
into the silence.
"Damerell, Lieutenant Philip," he whispered desperately.
"Please speak in a normal tone," the computer requested. A
terrified sound escaped his throat.
"Damerell, Lieutenant-" he managed before the telltale
whine of a phaser rifle sent him flinging himself for the
relative safety of the ground. Fortunately that was enough for
the computer to identify him, and the panel opened, dropping a
stack of weapons and equipment on top of him. Searing heat in
his shoulder revealed that his dive had not been timed quite
right, but the adrenaline was pumping through his system. His
questing hands stumbled on a pair of infrared goggles, which he
quickly slapped on.
The room was revealed to him in a variety of colours that, in
different circumstances, might have been considered pretty. The
intruder was revealed as a bright blob, and the goggles briefly
flashed up the information that the body temperature was much
higher than was normal for a human. Damerell also noted that the
intruder was built like a brick shithouse.
He spotted a phaser rifle lying under the desk just a couple
of feet in front of him, and as the intruder made his way towards
the equipment locker, Damerell dove for the rifle, grabbed it as
he landed, slapped blindly at the power gauge and fired. His
first shot succeeded in stunning the desk, but he frantically
spun the dial back in the other direction and fired again.
The desk practically disintegrated around him and he heard the
intruder grunt with pain as the shot connected. Damerell lay in
silence for a minute, not even breathing, listening as the
intruder dragged himself back to his feet and ran from the
office. Damerell got to his feet and staggered to the open door,
finding the lighting panel and activating them. He blinked as
the lights came on and brought his rifle up reflexively as
someone entered the room from the door leading to the cells. It
was Eric Kennel, who had been in the brig since the Counsellor
had floored him. His nose was still bandaged.
"Hyou safed hmy lifve," he mumbled, obviously still in
pain.
"Mm?" Damerell asked, his brain having shut down some time
ago.
"Don' hyou thin hyou ort to gho hafter ‘im?" the auditor
suggested and Damerell, whose brain was happy to receive
instructions from any source at this point, turned around and
staggered out of the door, following the blood tracks on the
floor. They led to the entrance to a Jeffries tube. Crouching,
Damerell prepared to open the panel, staying to one side.
Hill cursed in frustration as the turbolift vanished upwards
and got to his feet. He was about to leave the area when
movement caught his eye. It was the doors to some nearby
quarters closing. Frowning, as he was the only member of the crew
at this section of the deck, he quickly tapped the control to
open the door and stepped in.
"Who's in there?" he called into the gloom. A movement caught
his eye, not the silvery-grey of Starfleet issue EVA suits but a
bulkier, black version. He sprang at the intruder, intending to
knock the slender figure off his feet, but instead found himself
being practically caught out of mid-air and catapulted him across
the room, and he realised as he flew through the air that the
intruder could not be human.
He smashed into the bedside cabinet and got to his feet as
quickly as he could, wincing at the pain in his side. The
intruder started across the quarters in the semi-dark, tripping
over an upturned chair and cursing. Hill finally thought to
touch the communicator panel on his wrist.
"Hill to security, there's an intruder in Damerell's quarters,
sector 33."
"Sorry sir, we're on the other side of the deck."
"Spiffing," he muttered, then began to wonder whether he had
been spending too much time around Cholmondely-Smythe.
The intruder got to his feet and Hill chased him out of the
room, to catch sight of him heading for a nearby Jeffries tube
entrance. If he managed to get it open, it could expose the
entire rest of the ship to vacuum, drawing all the air out. Hill
took off like a spitball from a peashooter in a vain attempt to
prevent this. The intruder desperately tapped at the override
panel.
Damerell opened the Jeffries tube and peered down the yawning
hole. There was no sign of the intruder and he sighed with
relief. He was about to turn away when he was abruptly buffeted
by a gale that seemed to be howling into the tube. A head
appeared at the hole just as the wind stopped, and Damerell, more
than a little delirious by this point, pointed the phaser rifle
directly at the forehead of the intruder, whose faceplate matched
the rest of his body suit in that it was totally black, and
screamed, "Move one millimetre you complete bastard and I'll
bloody disintegrate you!!!!!!"
The figure froze as a voice echoed up the shaft behind
him.
"Damerell, is that you?" Hill shouted up, scrambling around
the figure and got to his feet. He eyed the swaying navigator
and gently removed the rifle from his loose grasp, aiming it at
the black-clad intruder.
"Damerell, are you okay?"
"Mm?"
Hill glanced at him, noting for the first time the blood
seeping from his shoulder.
"You've been injured!"
Damerell frowned uncertainly, looking down at his sodden
uniform.
"Oh yeah!" he said in an amazed tone, then he gave a little
whimper, his eyes rolled back into his head and he collapsed.
"Bloody brilliant," Hill muttered, prodding the comatose
navigator with his foot. He thumbed his communicator. "Hill to
anyone who wants to listen, medical and security teams to deck
five, section four." Suddenly remembering the intruder, he spun
to point the rifle back at the figure, who had been about to
start trying to tiptoe away.
"Freeze dirtbag!" Hill snarled, and then paused to cough as
the snarling caught the back of his throat. He continued in a
more normal voice. "Take off the mask!"
Reluctantly the figure removed the oddly shaped helmet, to
reveal the bright blue features and shocking white hair of an
Andorian. Hill stared at him, feeling a small shock of
recognition.
"There's no need to be nasty," the Andorian tried to say
soothingly, but it came out in a rather quavering tone.
"I know you," Hill muttered, and suddenly it hit him. "You're
M'cus Hasbean, the Andorian scientist! The Andorian government's
put a price out on your head for your capture ever since you
disappeared from one of their research facilities with quite a
lot of expensive equipment!"
Hasbean preened slightly. "Yes, well, it's nice to be
recognised."
The pounding of footsteps heralded the arrival of a security
team, followed by Cholmondely-Smythe, Jackson and Kennel.
"Jolly good show, Number One," Cholmondely-Smythe congratulated him,
"Caught the saboteur, what?"
"Actually, Damerell did most of the catching," Hill admitted,
just as Hasbean squeaked out, "Saboteur? Me?! I can assure you I
am most certainly not that!"
"You were caught on deck seven!" Hill pointed out, and Hasbean
gave him a withering look.
"Oh yes, having just planted a bomb on that very deck I
decided to hang around to see what would happen," he said
sarcastically.
"Last place we'd look?" Hill suggested, but Cholmondely-Smythe
shook his head.
"No Number One, our jolly old saboteur would know we'd be all
over that deck, doing repairs and searching and whatnot. Not to
mention that I really think the saboteur is more likely to have
been engaging in a firefight with Mr Damerell at around the time
you were chasing Dr Hasbean here, given that he was trying to
kill Mr Kennel."
Kennel gasped. "How could you know that?" Cholmondely-Smythe
gave him a look that far surpassed the merely withering one
Hasbean had used on Hill before.
"Because, my dear Auditor, the saboteur has already murdered
every one of you associates."
The auditor gasped again, in shock and horror. "They're all
dead?" he asked, then began to blubber.
"Nice one Captain," Hill said over the sound of the auditor's
sobs.
Jackson broke the awkward moment by finally noticing Damerell
lying bleeding on the floor.
"What happened to him?" he asked curiously, kneeling beside
him.
"Dunno," Hill replied. "He was already bleeding when he
stopped Hasbean."
"Thanks awfully for reminding me, Number One,"
Cholmondely-Smythe gestured to the guards, who surrounded the
Andorian.
A medical team rolled up a stretched and Damerell was lifted
onto it. They were about to take him away when
Cholmondely-Smythe stopped them. He delicately rubbed one finger
into a patch of blood on the navigator's uniform.
"Does this look like Andorian blood to you, Number One?"
Hill shrugged. "I've never seen Andorian blood, so I really
couldn't say sir."
"Well it jolly well doesn't look like it to me! In fact, I
think this is Orion blood!"
Hill frowned. "The Mahkarowni?"
"I'm not sure," Cholmondely-Smythe waved the medical team
away. "Commander, what can you tell me about our renegade
scientist?"
Hill thought. "Not much else, really, sir. He's one of
Andor's most brilliant scientists but he's erratic, and when
their government refused to fund his latest work, he went
renegade. Rumour has it he's sold the technology to the
Orions..." he trailed off.
"Quite," Cholmondely-Smythe muttered. "So now the Orions want
him back, and they're not afraid to kill to get him." He
straightened, coming to a decision. "It's not safe for him on
board, and it's not safe for anyone else while he is on board.
Can you think of a solution?"
"Um, well..." Hill stammered.
"It's quite simple," Cholmondely-Smythe told him. "We send the
Golden Goose away before the foxes arrive to fight over him!"
Hill gave him an odd look. "Sir?" he asked cautiously.
"I mean we send him off the ship in a shuttle!"
Cholmondely-Smythe said, exasperated.
"Oh!"
Damerell sat huddled miserably in the back of the
shuttlecraft, alongside the silent figure of M'cus Hasbean. In
the front of the shuttle, Counsellor Hill and Colonel Klumf were
at the controls. Cholmondely-Smythe had ordered the two of them
to take the shuttle Bateman and Hasbean and get as far
away from the crippled Psycho towards the regular shipping lanes
as fast as they could. When he had heard about the mission,
Damerell had demanded that he be allowed to accompany them. As
he had said, "Anything to get me away from this ship!!!" The
Counsellor, who had begun to worry about the navigator's mental
health, had advised the Captain to allow him to go, despite
having one arm in a sling.
Klumf had again misinterpreted his intentions and was singing
his praises as a valiant hero once more, and had been for the
past half an hour. Damerell really wanted him to stop, and was
contemplating shooting the Klingon in the back with the phaser in
the storage locker under his seat. He remembered that Klumf was
a Liaison Officer, so perhaps shooting him wasn't the best thing
to do.
Counsellor Hill glanced back at them.
"Everything okay back there?" she asked.
"Fabulous," Hasbean said dryly. "But the service is a little
shabby."
"Silence traitorous scum!" Klumf thundered.
"Ooh, get him," Hasbean muttered, but quietly.
They flew on in silence for a few more minutes, when Klumf
suddenly looked round at the back of the craft.
"Can you hear that?" he asked, a second before an explosion
rocked the vessel and deafened them all. Damerell found himself
being thrown to the floor, Hasbean beside him.
"Warning, containment field breached," the computer said
dispassionately. "Loss of containment integrity in thirty
minutes."
Counsellor Hill got to her feet as Klumf stirred. Damerell
was already sat on the floor, rocking gently. She ran through
the hatchway to the very rear and examined the consoles there,
most of which were smoking. There was a large hole in the deck
next to the containment housing of the shuttle's small warp
core.
"Hmm," she commented.
Lifting the floor grill-plating she rolled her sleeves back to
begin digging around in the circuits there, finally managing to
get one of the darkened consoles to partially light up.
"Warning, loss of containment integrity in twenty-five
minutes," the computer sing-songed.
Klumf joined her.
"What is the problem?"
"It's been sabotaged!" Hill frowned at the flickering console,
giving it a good, hard bang on the side. The flickering
stabilised, though whether due to the bang fixing a loose
connection or simply through fear of the Counsellor, Klumf
couldn't say. She began to tap the controls, but quickly gave up
in disgust.
"Someone set this thing to go off a certain time after the
shuttle was launched. They've taken out the air recyclers as
well, so we're running out of air!"
"We've got to escape before it goes up!" Hasbean shouted,
diving for the spacesuit closet. He yanked the door open and was
promptly floored as the suits fell out on top of him. Damerell
crawled over on his hands and knees, grabbing one of the
suits.
"Um," he said, holding it up. Through one sleeve was a hole
he could stick his finger through. Hill grabbed the closet door
and examined it, finding several small holes where shrapnel from
the explosion had entered.
"Oh."
They spent the next few minutes feverishly assembling all the
undamaged sections of suits they could, thankful that the suits
were modular one-size-fits-all and could be broken apart into
components. They examined their spoils. Four torsos, three
helmets, seven arms and nine legs. Finally Hasbean spoke.
"Since there's not enough pieces to go around and make four
whole suits I vote we leave one of you behind." Hill rounded on
him.
"Well I vote we leave you behind!" she growled. The Andorian
looked smug.
"You can't. I'm a hostage and you have to protect me."
Hill frowned, then turned to kick seven bells out of an
inoffensive but dead control panel.
"Warning, loss of containment in fifteen minutes," the
computer interjected.
"Look..." Damerell began, but got no further as Klumf slapped
him on the back.
"Once again the warrior demonstrates his valour and bravery!"
the Klingon roared. "He volunteers to stay behind to allow the
rest of us to escape!"
"N..." Damerell began, before collapsing.
"Great!" Hasbean said. "Now let's get dressed!"
He and Klumf began to assemble suits for themselves, and the
Counsellor bent over Damerell.
"Are you sure?" she asked. She didn't know this crew very
well yet, but she was fairly certain that this wasn't quite what
Damerell had been about to say.
"Nnnn..." he moaned.
She considered the options, then performed mental triage and
decided that Damerell was probably beyond saving anyway. She
quickly joined the others and a minute later they were ready to
leave the shuttle. They left Damerell, Klumf giving him one last
Klingon salute, and stepped into the airlock. It cycled and Hill
aimed them in the direction she knew the Psycho was. They fired
their small thrusters, leaving the shuttle and its heroic
occupant behind.
"Mister Hill, I want that dastardly saboteur, indeed, that
despicable murderer found this instant!" Cholmondely-Smythe
ordered, pacing the bridge furiously, as he had been doing for
the last fifteen minutes. Hill sighed.
"Yes Captain," he replied, just like the last hundred times
Cholmondely-Smythe had demanded the same thing. "But it's like
looking for a needle in a haystack. There are four hundred crew
aboard this vessel, many of them inhum... I mean not of Terran
origin... well, the first stands about quite a few of the Terran
ones, actually..." he was stopped by the look on the Captain's
face, then continued seamlessly, "so I'm somewhat at a loss as to
how to track him."
Cholmondely-Smythe gave up pacing and stood breathing down
Hill's neck at the science console. Hill barely successfully
fought the urge to elbow him in the groin.
"Bring up the details of Orion Physiology, there's a good
chap." Hill obliged, and Cholmondely-Smythe studied them, a
thoughtful, constipated look on his face.
"Their body temperature is higher than a human's."
"Yes, but so are Vulcans and quite a few other species," Hill
pointed out.
"But not exactly ten degrees higher!" Cholmondely-Smythe
exclaimed. Hill shrugged.
"Sure, I guess, but he could be hiding by the coolant
chambers, or even just by the refrigerators in the galley. He
could lower his temperature any number of ways."
"But his core temperature would barely drop, old bean,
whatever he does to disguise the temperature on his frightful
extremities," Cholmondely-Smythe was insistent.
"Performing a directed, controlled scan of every individual on
the ship, in depth enough to measure that temperature and assess
it for external temperature variations will take hours!"
"It's our best hope!"
Hill nodded, resigned. He turned back to his console and
began working.
Cholmondely-Smythe strode to the centre of the bridge, just in
front of his command chair. At last, he thought, things were
beginning to swing their way.
"Captain," Bleep spoke into the quiet of the bridge, "I have
lost tight-beam communication with the shuttle.
Inside the shuttle Damerell was hammering furiously at the
airlock, screaming at them to come back but soon gave up as he
realised he was using up all the air. Then he realised he was
going to die anyway and started screaming again. Giving up on
that when his throat started to hurt he feverishly began
assembling parts of suit and produced a complete one except for
one arm and a helmet. He attached the least damaged of the parts
and searched the lockers for some sort of sealant, eventually
finding a pack of chewing gum. He started chewing
determinedly.
Drifting slowly further away from the shuttle, the three
refugees watched the small white vessel tumble gently through the
darkness.
"He was a great man," Klumf stated, respect in his voice.
"Er... yeah," Hill agreed. She fiddled with her suit's arm
communicator panel. A faint beeping caught her attention. She
boosted the gain as far as it could go, then dialled out the
subspace interference as best as the suit's feeble system could
manage.
"... cho to Shuttle we... ren...vous... position...
minutes."
"I can't make it out," she said in frustration. "They can't
move with that hull damage, the ship'll tear itself apart!"
"I think," Klumf muttered, his tone drawing the Counsellor's
instant attention, "we have other problems."
On the far side of the shuttle, above their relative position,
the Sfhagheti broke out of warp and executed a sweeping arc
towards the shuttle.
"They're going in for a closer look," Hill said. The Orion
ship paused as its scanners worked over the crippled vessel.
Klumf was about to say something when, with a blinding flash and
slightly unsteadily, the Psycho entered the arena, a gaping hole
in the saucer section, trailing small pieces of debris as the
weakened hull gave way around it.
Speechless they watched as it rounded on the Orion. Only then
did an unfamiliar green transporter beam claim them.
"Bloody good show Engineer!" Cholmondely-Smythe barked over
the intercom to Stark and Barfoot, who had rigged up a ragged
collection of forcefields and bulkheads in record time to prevent
the stresses of minimum warp from ripping the ship apart. As it
was, it had been a close thing.
"Try not to put it under any more stress!" Barfoot replied. He
muted the intercom. "You insane ponce," he added under his
breath.
"Sorry old bean," Cholmondely-Smythe said regretfully, "but
that isn't really possible. Helm, intercept the cad try and keep
the breach away from them."
Wall threw the ship into a banking turn, sheer luck meaning it
was perfectly timed to bring the Psycho's strongest shields to
bear just as the Sfhagheti lashed out with its disruptors.
"Return fire," Cholmondely-Smythe calmly ordered as the ship
rocked around them.
"The breach is weakening!" the duty engineer shouted as the
ship vibrated from a glancing strike. The ship began to shudder
from rapid, short bursts from the Orion.
"Be so good as to shunt eighty percent power to starboard
phasers, return fire with port phasers only."
Wall turned to look at him. "Sir?"
"Use the starboard phasers on maximum dispersal, but run them
at one hundred and ten precent, overheat the blasted coils! Mr
Bleep, match their polarity to the Orion's disruptors, then flip
them to the inverse, there's a good android."
"A depolarising defense field?" Hill raised his eyebrows,
honestly surprised. That was a trick many people were unaware
the phasers were capable of. It had its problems, one being that
continual usage of the phasers in that way had a tendency to melt
the coils. As Bleep implemented the field, the shuddering
noticeably diminished.
"Indeed. Number One?"
"I'm reading one lifesign on the shuttle... my readings are
distorted for some reason... oh my God!" Hill paled. "It's on a
countdown to detonation."
"Time?"
"Ten minutes."
The feeling of sudden return of gravity was more than a little
nauseating, Counsellor Hill decided as the insides of an alien
ship appeared around them. Hasbean obviously agreed as he
clutched his stomach and moaned.
"Be ill on me," Klumf warned, "and I will kill you."
"But I'm sick!"
A cough drew their attention to three Andorians holding
phasers pointing at them, looking none too happy at being
ignored.
"Put them down," the Counsellor said scornfully. "My name is
Lieutenant-Commander Hill of the Federation Starship Psycho and I
demand to be taken to your bridge this instant!"
Lowering the phasers with some reluctance. "You are on board
the Andorian Defense Fleet Ship Shirtz. M'cus Hasbean, you are
under arrest for..."
"Sorry boys," the Counsellor smiled. "He's under Starfleet
protective custody so you can shove your arrest where, let's be
honest, it's best kept. Now take me to the bridge!" Despite the
situation, she suddenly realised that she was having a whale of a
time being nasty.
"Follow us."
They took them through the corridors to the bridge, which was
close enough to suggest that the Shirtz was a small ship. The
cramped bridge was quiet, and the viewscreen was displaying the
current firefight between the Psycho and the Sfhagheti. The
counsellor strode forwards saying, "You have to get involved,
help the Psycho out!"
The captain had the decency to look shifty. "Sorry, I can't.
Officially I'm not meant to be here, and if the Orions knew we
were, that could mean some serious problems for my Government,
which I'm not willing..."
The ship was abruptly thrown violently to the side, with only
Hill keeping her feet, already having had enough experience of
Wall's piloting to let it phase her. She glared at the captain
as the ops officer reported.
"It's an Orion scout, Captain. I don't know how they found
us..." She looked up at Hasbean. "He's still got his helmet on!
He's transmitting a bloody homing beacon!"
Hill smiled. "Looks like they already know you're here," she
said. "Now get involved!"
"I don't... I can't..." the Andorian captain stuttered, so
Hill decided to make it easy for him.
"I'm commandeering this vessel in the name of Starfleet, get
the hell out of my chair!" She shoved him out of the way and sat
in the command seat. "Klumf, get at the helm, I want someone I
can trust there!" The Klingon sat, having stared the andorian at
that position into trouser-dampening terror.
"Evasive," Hill ordered grimly.
The Psycho was starting to become a bit worse for wear, the
phasers whining pathetically.
"Sir, I have communication from an unknown vessel that is
apparently engaging the Mahkarowni."
"Put it on then."
Every eyebrow on the bridge raised at the sight of Counsellor
Hill sat in the command chair of an unfamiliar bridge, Klumf at
the helm.
"Captain," she said without preamble, "the shuttle's going to
explode, and Damerell's still on board."
"We're aware of that, Counsellor," Cholmondely-Smythe
answered, unruffled. "Any suggestions."
"Actually," a different voice replied, and Hasbean entered the
view, "I think I can help there."
Damerell, having chewed his jaw into aching paralysis, had
resorted to kneeling and praying, quietly.
"Seven minutes," the computer informed him.
"Bugger off," he replied absently.
"Unable to comply," the computer said. "Please rephrase your
request."
Damerell began to sob, and was therefore greatly surprised
when a swirling blue, sparkling light dissolved him into his
component atoms.
Hasbean smirked smugly as Damerell's lifesign signal
disappeared from their sensors. "It's worked!" he said.
"So this... what did you call it?" the Consellor asked.
"A trans-shield anode."
"Yeah... it lets you beam through shields?"
"Indeed it does. You see normally this is impossible and the
subject is invariably killed but the interaction of the beam and
shield producing an enormous backwash of energy. The anode,
whilst giving the transporter a clearer signal to focus on, also
dissipates the energy harmlessly away."
Hill uncrossed her eyes and glanced at the viewscreen. "What's
wrong with the Psycho?" she asked.
"It seems to be losing pitch control," Klumf reported. "I
have a faint message on emergency channel... they have been
struck by another subspace pulse as when they left Simper One,
are attempting to regain control."
Hill swung to glare at Hasbean. "That first pulse was you
beaming on board the Psycho as we left the station, wasn't it?"
The scientist nodded. "And you knew this would happen!?"
The andorian frowned. "You wanted to save your friend, didn't
you?" Hill opened her mouth, closed it, opened it again, then
slapped him wordlessly. Ignoring his whines, she turned back to
Klumf.
"The Orions are closing in on the Psycho," he said.
"Then intercept them!" she ordered, giving the andorian
captain such a fierce glare when he made to protest that he hid
behind the science officer.
Damerell rematerialised about a foot off the deck, falling to
the deck with a heavy thump beside his empty gerbil cage. The
ship rolled under Damerell, making him feel seasick. Glancing
painfully around, he saw that he was inside a shuttlecraft. What
was going on? How had he got here? Encumbered by his
semi-complete EVA suit he struggled to rise, but was abruptly
aided by a hand grabbing the back of his clothes and hurling him
across the cabin.
"Ow!" he exclaimed as his attacked closed the gap between
them. His jaw dropped in amazement. It was Lieutenant
Purveyance.
"You're dead!" he shouted, and Purveyance growled.
"No, the real Linda Purveyance is dead, folded in half in a
storage locker on Simper One. Using his hand in the transporter
accident made it look like I was dead, so I could look for the
trans-shield anode or Hasbean in relative safety. But you have
foiled me at every turn, and now I'm going to sort that out!!!"
The huge man wrenched a console out of the bulkhead, leaving
decking and titanium strewn everywhere, and prepared to drop it
on Damerell who scrambled back in terror, having no idea what the
madman was talking about. As he did so he planted on foot on a
steel rod that had fortuitously fallen over the gerbil cage. The
rod pivoted up and connected with a satisfying crunch between
Purveyance's legs. The big man's eyes crossed and he collapsed,
the desk falling on top of him. The rod fell back, smashing the
gerbil cage. Damerell stood up trembling, then, having been to
the Wall school of fighting, planted a boot in Purveyance's side
before making for the hatch.
"Bugger!!!" Wall screamed as he fought to stabilise the
bucking ship.
"Language helmsman!" Cholmondely-Smythe reprimanded him,
sternly. "What is going on, Mr Hill?"
"It's another pulse sir, from out of nowhere just like last
time. I don't understand." This time, however, having noted all
the major problems the pulse had caused before, it was a
relatively short time before Hill had the Psycho at least stable
again.
"Shields functioning on less than minimal," Bleep said, and
Hill tapped a few controls.
"Sensors back up, barely," he said, and the viewscreen
flickered on just in time to see the Mahkarowni bearing down on
them, gunports glowing. Cholmondely-Smythe hesitated. There
didn't seem to be any options.
A hail of blue charges impacted on the upper surface of the
Orion as an Andorian patrol vessel screamed through the viewer,
making the Orion furiously turn to give chase.
"That's my great niece," Hill gave a small smile, and then
cursed as a shot from the Sfhagheti made the Psycho tilt
alarmingly, and his console suddenly became a nightmare of
flashing lights.
"Weapons back up," Hill shouted, and without waiting for
orders both he and Wall launched separate volleys of phasers and
torpedoes, forcing the Sfhagheti to withdraw. Crippled the
starship may be, but she was still a match for the smaller Orion
vessel.
"Spiffing," Cholmondely-Smythe muttered, swallowing hard.
"Wall, um..." he frowned at the ensign who had taken Damerell's
place at navigation, who hadn't actually registered on him until
now, "Dreadfully sorry, got no clue whatsoever who you are, old
chap."
"Ensign Stocks, sir," the young officer replied.
"Marvellous. You two, take evasive as necessary, keep that
breach protected! Number One, do we have Damerell?"
Hill had forgotten that detail in the midst of all the
excitement. "Um... yeah, I'm picking his biosign up... he's in
the shuttlebay and..." he drew in a breath, "he's being chased by
our intruder!"
"Are you sure?!"
"Definitely, the body temperature matches exactly."
The Captain hung on as Wall threw the ship into a dangerously
tight turn with a cry of, "Whee!!!"
"Uh," Counsellor Hill muttered to Klumf as she stood by his
chair, "we're awfully close to the Bateman." They had
spend the last few minutes desperately outrunning the more
heavily armed Mahkarowni.
"Yes. I am testing the mettle of our adversary."
"Right. Only, according to my calculations, it's gonna go up
at any moment."
Klumf executed one last flypast then, as the Mahkarowni swept
around behind them, kicked the engines into high gear. Behind
them, the shuttle exploded, severely damaging the Orion. The
Shirtz was buffeted by the shockwave, and the ship was plunged
into darkness.
Damerell was ploughed into the deck by the force of the impact
with Purveyance.
"You fool!" the Orion screamed. "That anode was priceless! My
mission here is ruined!"
Damerell huddled into a tight ball. When it became apparent
that he wasn't about to die a horrible and painful death, he
uncurled slightly to see Purveyance walking towards the shuttle
with a phaser out. Uncertainly, Damerell got to his feet and
scuttled over, peering around the hatchway. Purveyance was
aiming the phaser directly at the containment housing. The huge
Orion glanced over his shoulder and grinned evilly.
"I never really expected to live through this assignment
anyway," he said, and fired the phaser. The beam began to cut
through the plating. Damerell, without a second's hesitation,
turned and ran. A few seconds later there was an explosion
similar to that on board the Bateman. He threw himself to
the floor, looking up as the body of Purveyance was thrown out of
the hatchway to land in a jumbled heap. The access door to the
shuttlebay opened, to reveal Barfoot.
"You haven't buggered up another shuttle, have you?" he asked,
running in.
"Wha...?" Damerell managed.
"I detected the explosion and came to see what was going
on."
The computer voice of the shuttle echoed around the bay.
"Warning, core breach in one minute."
Barfoot gave Damerell a disgusted look. "Honestly, it never
rains but it pours with you, does it?" He tapped his
communicator. "Barfoot to bridge."
"Cholmondely-Smythe here."
"I'm with Mister Damerell in the shuttlebay, we really need to
get the doors open and the shields down before one of the
shuttles in here goes nova on us."
"Understood."
Barfoot dragged Damerell to the control room and quickly
released the doors, without bothering to activate the containment
field. Everything not bolted down, including Purveyance's body,
was dragged from the bay. The shuttle just sat there, ominously.
"Hmm," Barfoot frowned at the console. "We'll never get enough
of a push with the landing tractors the way they are," he mused.
"I know."
He quickly made a few modifications, then called the
bridge.
"Ready when you are, bridge."
"Spiffing," Cholmondely-Smythe responded. "Shields down on my
mark... mark!"
Quickly, Barfoot implemented the automated tractor sequence he
had programmed. Two beams picked the shuttle up, lifting it into
the air while simultaneously two others swung in a wide arc,
slamming into the side of the shuttle and sending it careering
out of the bay doors like a baseball. There was a brief flicker
as the shuttle passed the shield perimeter and they were
reactivated. Shortly afterward, it detonated.
Captain's Log, Supplemental.
After the near destruction of the Mahkarowni and the right
'what for' the Psycho gave the Sfhagheti, the Orion
commander has agreed to a ceasefire, which I can tell you is a
great relief. We have tractored aboard the badly damaged
Andorian patrol craft and collected our crew members. Damerell
has been rushed to Sickbay, where he is receiving the best care
Jackson's staff can prevent the doctor from supplying. All in
all, it's turned out jolly well, I think.
"Gentlemen," Cholmondely-Smythe overrode the argument between
the Orion commander and the Andorian captain. "I'm frightfully
bored by all this. You've both behaved jolly badly. The simple
fact is, Commander," he said to the Orion, "I'm not going to turn
him over to you right at this moment because you put an agent on
my ship who nearly killed us all."
The Orion looked innocent. "What agent?"
"The one currently floating around outside my ship. Slap on
the wrist for you, you naughty great hulking alien. As for you,"
he turned to the Andorian, "I feel that, since the Andorians lost
him once, I can't worry that they might lose him again.
Therefore I am taking him into Federation custody for trial at a
later date. Now both of you get off my ship!"
That dealt with, he returned to the bridge and ordered the
Psycho back to Simper One for repairs.
Damerell was going to make the most of this leave time. Okay,
it had only been a few days since the last one, but it had been a
rather hectic few days. He had spent the last couple of them in
sickbay, huddled under the sheets of the biobed. Now, however,
he was going to relax and enjoy himself.
The last thing he wanted, then, was for three security guards
to jump him and pin him to the floor as he and Wall strolled
along the corridors of Simper One.
"What do you think you're doing?" Wall demanded as Damerell
was dragged to his feet and handcuffed.
"We were told he was dangerous," one of the guards replied,
"that he beat up an Orion security officer when he was here
before."
"Yeah, he did," Wall said, making the guards glance at each
other nervously and tighten the handcuffs. "But why are you
arresting him now?"
"He jumped bail."
"No I didn't!" Damerell wailed. "Lieutenant Purveyance
posted..." he trailed off.
"We don't know who that was, but it wasn't Purveyance. We
found him in a two-by-four locker a couple of days ago. So I'm
afraid, technically, you jumped bail."
"But I didn't know!!" Damerell began to struggle, and one of
the guards slapped a hypospray into him, making his eyes cross
and a happy smile spread over his face before he crumpled to the
floor.
"Don't worry mate!" Wall shouted as they dragged the navigator
away, "We'll sort it out!"
Far away, deep within hostile territory, Commander Shitake of
the Orion Destroyer Sfhagheti stood before his employer.
"Stupid Orions," the shadowy figure said in disgust. She
shifted to reveal pointy ears and a bowl haircut.
"Please, forgive me," Shitake pleaded. "I will prove
myself!"
"Not in a month o'bluidy Sundays, lad," the figure replied in
a strange accent. "I mean... no."
She pulled a disruptor and disintegrated the Orion. Another
figure stepped out of the shadows.
"Now what?" he asked.
"Now, Tomahawk," she replied, "we go to Plan B."